It was made as round wafers with a hole in the middle so the bread could be stored on sticks under the roof.[4]Why under the roof??
* Steven Kates is like the perfect example of my rule of thumb: do not trust anyone's judgement if they used to be a rabid Left/Right winger and subsequently became a rabid Right/Left winger. His cult membership of the Church of Trump now leads him to see nothing wrong, nothing wrong at all, with a President insisting that his Justice Department must prosecute his former political opponent (the chants of "lock her up" during the campaign - and after - presumably don't bother him at all). He is completely gullible to anything he hears via Fox News or Breitbart, clearly does not look deeply into issues, and has no qualms if the US ends up a tinpot dictatorship, as long as it is Trump's.
* Slate runs an opinion piece by someone arguing that the gay community condemning Spacey for using his "gay" disclosure when he apologised for what might have happened (OK - what almost certainly did happen) many years ago to the 14 years old who (unwisely) went alone to his party are actually feeding an unwarranted "gay pedophile" panic that used to just be confined to the heterosexual side. That's a brave opinion, but I suspect it is more or less right, although complicated by the fact that further disclosures have indicated that Kevin has had appalling workplace gay sexual harassment history anyway, so he is far from deserving sympathy for anything. But in the big picture, while there are probably figures out there somewhere, as I have said before, I suspect that the normalisation of the gay lifestyle in the West has probably lessened the amount of predatory behaviour towards youth, not increased it. But, who knows, it could be a wrong guess. (I mean, it sure could be argued that the sexual revolution obviously did nothing to decrease workplace sexual harassment in at least Hollywood through the 70's, 80's and 90's. But is media a business especially prone to power plays in sex?)
* Texas would probably be the State most likely to resist gun law changes regardless of the number of mass shootings that happen there. It's sad and tragic, but I am sure there will be some sentiment around to the effect "well, what did you expect?" And wingnuts will freak out about how insensitive it is to say such a thing. The NRA will come out with a proposal for a new scheme for no sales tax for Churches buying guns for self protection, or some such thing...
Update: what did I say about Texas?:
Asked by Fox News what can be done to stop the insanity and carnage that is happening time and time again in multiple shootings, Paxton [Texas Attorney General] replied:I see that it is reported that a local armed resident did fire at the guy - after he walked out of the Church leaving bodies everywhere. Yeah, that helps:
“This is going to happen again.”
I wish some law would fix all of this.”
“All I can say is in Texas at least we have the opportunity to have conceal carry,” he explained. “And so … there’s always the opportunity that gunman will be taken out before he has the opportunity to kill very many people.”
Texas officials just held a press conference about the deadliest mass shooting in the state, and revealed that a local resident fired back at the shooter who killed 26 people at a small town church ... and then gave chase before the gunman was found dead.
A rep for the Texas Department of Public Safety gave a blow-by-blow account of what went down Sunday morning in Sutherland Springs, TX where a gunman opened fire at the First Baptist Church.
He says the gunman, reportedly ID'd as Devin Kelley, was dressed in all black tactical gear when he opened fire on the church -- using an AR assault-style rifle -- from the outside and then continued inside. When he walked out again, a local resident engaged him with his own rifle, causing the gunman to flee.